However, the handsome young man still didnāt do anything. He didnāt even say anything as he sat there lazily, simply looking noncommittally at Priestess Liu. The stalwart follower was also quite at ease. He was hugging his shoulders and had lifted his chin, as if waiting for Priestess Liu to indicate her position.
The priestess sighed. āWhen I have not listened to what my patron says? Iāll do as you wish.ā
At that, the young man finally stood up and fussed with his cloak for a bit. āThen Iāll look around for a bit.ā
Qin Yining had already followed the duchess to the yard and vaguely heard a resonant male bass behind her. She found it a bit familiar, but didnāt pay much attention to it since she couldnāt remember where sheād heard it before.
āGrandmother, shall we go visit the main hall first?ā Qin Yining asked merrily as she supported her grandmother out the moon gate and took a turn to arrive at the yard in front of the male hall.
The duchess however, shook her head with a sigh. āDarling Yi, take a look around if youād like. Iām a bit tired and would like to burn some incense for Mother of the Great Chariot.ā
āThen Iāll go with you.ā When Qin Yining saw the weariness that hung in the space between the duchessā brows, she forewent her ideas of looking around.
The duchessā smile deepened when she saw her granddaughter thus. āItās rare for you girls to venture forth from the manor. Take a look around! I have Bao- mama and the maids here to keep me company. In any case, Iāll be going back to the carriage to rest after paying my respects. You should go take a look around so that you make the most out of this trip.ā
Qin Yining was indeed a bit tempted, but she was also worried about her grandmotherās health. The duchess stroked her cheek when she saw the girl fretting. āLittle girl, donāt be so full of concerns at such a young age. What could happen to me? Go visit the main hall with Miss Tang and come pay your respects in the temple later. That settles the matter.ā She flapped her hand, shooing the girls away and taking Bao- mama with her to the temple.
Tang Meng smiled. āDonāt worry, miss. I donāt see anything wrong with the elder madameās body, so itās just a worry of the heart. Sheās merely worried about matters at home.ā
Qin Yining nodded. She must be worried about what Priestess Liu said. She didnāt know much about fortune-telling and the mystical arts, and frankly was rather skeptical of the whole thing. After all, that priestess had just said something about the propitious star of marriage being in motion for her! Qin Yining felt her face burn. Somehow, the memory of that lecher whoād arrived from the sky that day rose unbidden. Heād stolen her hairpin and even stroked her cheek!
She frowned and coughed lightly. āThen letās take a look around. Youāre the one most familiar with the surroundings. Whereās the prettiest?ā
A laughing Tang Meng dragged Qin Yining behind her in a tour of the nunnery. Qin Yining was still wearing that crimson red, brocade cape with a white rabbit fur collar. She was the only spot of color in the ink painting that was this winterās day, in which everything was washed with shades of gray.
Pang Xiao and Huzi had made their way into the open space in front of the temple just in time to glimpse the figures of Qin Yining and Tang Meng in the distance. The girls were slowly moving in the direction of the main hall.
āMilord, who wouldāve thought that weād meet Miss Qin here today? Do you want to go talk to her?ā Huzi grinned, as he winked and waggled his eyebrows suggestively. āThere was obvious meaning in the old priestessā words just now. This is a perfect opportunity! Why notā¦ā
Pang Xiao looked disapprovingly at Huzi. The guard coughed and immediately shut up. His master remained utterly still, his eyes the only thing tracking Qin Yiningās fading figure. There was no one around them. Had there been anyone else, they wouldāve felt the sharp air subconsciously emanating from the young man, at direct odds with his genteel outfit of white robes and gray fur cloak. The two suddenly heard approaching footsteps, and swiftly ducked behind a thick tree.
The Duchess of Ding and Bao- mama had left the temple and were chatting as they headed for the main gates. āā¦granddaughter Yi is certainly mature for her age. Perhaps she already saw through the priestessā test? If she hadnāt even been willing to give alms, then how could she have treated Miss Tang well?ā
āArenāt you thinking too nobly of the priestess, mistress? This old servant feels that sheās just a money-grubbing person.ā
āThatās all a surface act. She might seem externally vulgar but thereās a sense of internal benevolence. Otherwise, why would she have taken in Miss Tang? That greedy, grasping attitude is just be an appearanceā¦ā The duchess and mama ās conversation grew fainter as they walked further on. Pang Xiao and Huzi didnāt come out until they were far in the distance.
āMilord, this elder madame is actually rather perceptive.ā Huzi was very kindly disposed towards the duchess. Pang Xiao nodded and retracted his overly keen edge after a momentās meditation. He softened the ruthless look of violence in his eyes and relaxed his naturally upright waist so that he slouched slightly. This instantly changed him back into a lazy refined gentlemen.
āCome, letās go to the temple as well.ā Pang Xiao set off at a quick pace.
āLetās offer some incense as well.ā Huzi nodded. āThe elder senior master and mistress, and elder mistress are all still in the palace, with no update on their situation. Hopefully the emperorās anger will be abated if we handle this matter well.ā
Some worry appeared on Pang Xiaoās face when his grandparents and mother, āinvitedā to the palace for a stay, were mentioned.
The figure of Mother of the Great Chariot in the temple was dignified and awe-inspiring. Pang Xiao and Huzi had both lit incense and were on their knees in the grand Taoist gesture of worship. The prince had prostrated himself. I beg thee, Mother of the Great Chariot, to keep my mother and family safe. May my sins fall on my shoulders only and affect not my family.
With his forehead to the ground and in fervent prayer, Pang Xiao looked⦠fragile. Huzi, kneeling next to his master, felt pain lance through him at the sight. He was never far from his master and understood the princeās troubles most deeply. Everyone only knew that the prince possessed great power and was a decisive killing machine, but who could see the troubles unique to him in his high position? The most tragic thing for a human was to give everything that they were, but to be misunderstood or denounced in return. Even his own family would lecture the prince for his ruthlessness at times, exhorting him to stop showing such blatant disregard for life. But who understood the princeās helplessness in the matter? He really had no other choice sometimes.
Creak. The door broke the solemn silence within the temple. Pang Xiao and Huzi both turned to see Qin Yining of the crimson cape and the little nun Tang Meng entering arm-in-arm. It looked like they were in good spirits, as Qin Yiningās particularly radiant smile, dimples, and merrily creased eyes were especially adorable.
Pang Xiao was momentarily stunned before he whipped himself back around. His ears were bright red as he remained stiffly on his knees. His head was tilted back up to the goddessā image and he seemed to be deep in sincere prayer.
There were three prayer rush cushions arrayed before them. Huzi had been on the leftmost one, but he had risen and was standing off to the side now. Pang Xiao had occupied the center one, leaving the two on his side free. Qin Yining hesitated, but it was a public premise and she had no right to ask him to leave. She settled for ignoring the man and lit incense sticks with Tang Meng, taking the cushion on the right and closing her eyes in pious prayer. Tang Meng took the left cushion and also made the grand gesture of Taoist piety.
Although Pang Xiao was still kneeling and hadnāt moved his head, his eyes had already flicked toward Qin Yining by his side. She looks so cute and fragile, but her destiny has been such a troubled oneā¦
She should be fourteen by now?
Heād been her current age when theyād first met. The seven year oldās clothing was nothing more than rags, but were faded clean from all the washings theyād received. Sheād been haggling vociferously with the shopkeeper of a medicine shop that her family apparently had a tab open with, but sheād been swept out empty-handed with nothing for her foster motherās sickness. A shop associate had even pushed her roughly to the ground.
Heād been watching from close by with Sir Zheng and Guard Zhao, and the guardās snicker of schadenfreude had made him uncomfortable. Heād thought sheād cry then, she really did have a reason to , but sheād only stood up, dusted herself off, and stubbornly shouldered her tattered wicker basket, using her remaining copper coins to buy two meat buns for her foster mother. Even now heād been unable to forget that pair of large and bright eyes in the small face. Sheād patted her flat little tummy and put on a brave smile to tell her foster mother that sheād already eaten.
He hadnāt been able to leave just like that and pretended to pass by her house, asking for a sip of water. The little girl was stunned silly when she saw him, taking a few long moments before crying out, āBrother Beauty!ā and running off to boil some water. Heād handed his entire money pouch to her when he drank. There were roughly ten taels of silver and a handful of coins inside. Sheād been scared silly by the amount of money and wouldnāt take it no matter what, so heād forced a supercilious, disdainful look on his face and sniffed that this was merely some loose change for pathetic beggars. Heād then departed in style under the baleful glares of Sir Zheng and Guard Zhao.
The two men were his fatherās old troops and complained angrily in highly charged voices as soon as they left.
āWhy did you help the enemyās daughter?!ā
āThat sonuvabitch Qin Huaiyuan deserves to die! That bastardās schemes are the reason General Pang died from false crimes i! The general was carved alive into slices and fed to the dogs! None of the Pangs survived that tragedyā¦ā
Pang Xiao had been fifteen years old, a year into his military service after Li Qitian had found him. The now Great Zhou emperor had hoisted the banner of General Pang high and made revenge for this wrongful death a key reason for overthrowing the old emperor. However, no one had ever asked Pang Xiao if he was willing to participate. The army had just suddenly stopped outside one of his grandfatherās restaurants one day and carried him off⦠no one had even known that Pang Xiao himself was just the product of one of General Pangās drunken nights. Possibly the general himself didnāt even remember the boy existed. And if the matriarch of the Pang household had been a kind soul, why would she have soundlessly swept Pang Xiaoās birth mother out the door?
His life had been decided by others the moment he was born, and how was this girl any different? Heād asked Sir Zheng back then, āWhat does this little girl know? You all stole her away that year and put her through endless suffering all this time. Seven years of this should be enough! If you really have it in you, why not seek revenge on her father? Why visit agony on an innocent child?!ā
Sir Zheng had only responded withāthe crimes of the father are the sins of the daughter. It was a fundamental disagreement in principles, and it wasnāt something that arguments could resolve.
A year later, Pang Xiao had built up a certain level of authority in the army and turned into a killer with steady hands, even when taking life in cold blood. But whenever he thought of the little girl, a patch of tenderness would visit his stone cold heart. Heād sent people to go find her, wanting to help her some. But the city of Liang had already been ravaged and looted. There was only an empty, broken shell left of her home. Heād captured people to interrogate, to ascertain the girlās whereabouts, but had only learned that her foster mother had died a month prior and the girl had been missing since then.
Heād thought she was dead. A mature little girl, someone who called him āBrother Beautyā in a soft, sweet voice, a child who filled him with guilt and pity, had died just like that. Soundlessly. Unnoticed. Her grievances unanswered.
Who wouldāve thought that heād see her again seven years later? Sheād blossomed into a beautiful flower, and caught him off guard whenever she entered his eyes.